Every word in my sentence ends with H. You can choose any letter you
like. Entries will be judged on sensibility, naturalness of syntax and
overall
elegance. The person who submits the best sentence in my opinion will
play the puzzle on the air in two weeks.

As you know, we don't actually submit to NPR, so we didn't work really hard on this one. I do think it's an interesting challenge. I talked with Henry about it and agree with his assessment: do you go for the natural syntax, or do you attempt a higher degree of difficulty? E, S and N are pretty easy; H (above) is medium difficulty; all the really high point Scrabbly letters (Z, X, J, etc.) are virtually impossible.

Here's my "easy" effort, which I concede isn't nearly good enough, but what do I care?

Since white mice rule the universe, maybe people choose exile.

Please, please, please post your sentences in the comments! I want to see.

Our tie-break rule: In
the event that a single round number is announced with a qualifier such
as "about" or "around" (e.g., "We received around 1,200 entries."), the
prize goes to the person who picked the range that includes that
specific number.

I went overboard with "David denied dreaded Druid dyad deed did defraud dead Donald."Mary Ann went for more elegance (elegant lady that she is) with "That ancient stalwart aunt might wilt but wont faint."